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4666-4715

  • ’Tis with alien feathers that the arrow captures its prey; consequently it gets no share of the bird's flesh;
  • (But) the falcon brings its quarry from the mountains itself; consequently the king lets it eat partridge and starling.
  • The speech that is not (derived) from (Divine) inspiration springs from self-will: it is like dust (floating) in the air and among the motes (in the sunbeams).
  • If this saying appear to the Khwája to be erroneous, recite a few lines at the beginning of (the Súra) Wa’l-Najm.
  • Down to (the words), Mohammed does not speak from self-will: ’tis only (a speech) gained by inspiration. 4670
  • O Ahmad (Mohammed), since thou despairest not of (receiving) inspiration, leave investigation and conjecture to the corporealists;
  • For in case of necessity a carcase is lawful (food), but there is no need to investigate (when one is) in the Ka‘ba of union.
  • Whosoever wilfully adopts a heresy without investigation and the utmost efforts to discover the right way,
  • The wind (of self-will) will lift him up and kill him, like (the people of) ‘Ád: he is no Solomon that it should waft his throne along.
  • For ‘Ád (and those like them) the wind is a treacherous carrier: (they are) as a lamb in the hands of a glutton, 4675
  • Which he lays in his lap as though it were his own child and carries away to slaughter like a butcher.
  • That wind was (the punishment) for ‘Ád because of their pride: they indeed deemed it a friend, (but) it was (really) a stranger (foe).
  • When of a sudden it turned its coat, that evil comrade shattered them piecemeal.
  • Shatter (destroy) the wind—for the wind (of self-will) is a great temptation— ere it shatter thee, like ‘Ád.
  • Húd admonished them, saying, “O prideful folk, this wind will tear out of your hands the skirt (to which ye are clinging). 4680
  • The wind is God's army, and (only) in hypocrisy (deceit) has it embraced you for a few days.
  • Secretly it is loyal to its Creator: when the appointed term arrives, the wind will throw up its hands (and desert you).”
  • See how the wind passes through the mouth, coming and going at every moment in advance and retreat.
  • The throat and teeth are in no danger from it; (but) when God commands, it attacks the teeth;
  • (And then) a (mere) atom of wind becomes (like) a mountain and heavy, and toothache keeps him (the sufferer) miserable and ill. 4685
  • This is the same wind that used to pass by harmlessly: it was the life of the crops and it became the death of the crops.
  • The hand of the person who (formerly) kissed thy hand—in the moment of anger that hand becomes a mace.
  • He (who has toothache) cries from his soul, “O Lord! O Lord! Take away this wind, O Thou whose aid is besought (by all)!
  • O mouth, thou wert heedless of this wind: (now) go and betake thyself to asking pardon of God with utter abasement.”
  • His hard eye (now) sheds tears like rain: (only) pain causes the unbelievers to call unto God. 4690
  • Since thou hast not received the breath (inspiration) of (holy) men from a (holy) man, hark, receive the Divine inspiration from pain.
  • The wind says, “I am a messenger from the King of mankind: now I bring good news, now calamitous and bad;
  • For I am subject to command, I am not in command of myself: when am I forgetful, like thee, of my King?
  • If thy (spiritual) state resembled that of Solomon, I should have carried thee as (I carried) Solomon.
  • I am (only) lent (to thee); I should have become a possession in thy hand: I should have made thee acquainted with my mystery. 4695
  • But since thou art rebellious and I am (only) taken on loan to serve thee for three or four days,
  • Therefore I will lay thee low, like ‘Ád, and dash away in revolt from thy army,
  • In order that thy faith in the Unseen may become firm at the moment when thy faith is (only) a source of woe.”
  • (For) at that moment, in sooth, all become believers: at that moment even the (most) headstrong run on their heads.
  • At that moment they cry piteously and make humble supplication, like robbers and brigands under the gibbet. 4700
  • But if you become upright in (your faith in) the Unseen, you are owner of the two worlds and a magistrate (exercising sovereign authority) over yourself.
  • The abiding (spiritual) magistracy and kingship is not (something) taken on loan for two days and ailing (perishable).
  • (Possessing that) you are delivered from strife and can act for yourself: you are king and at the same time beating your own drum.
  • When the World squeezes our throats tightly, would that our gullets and mouths had eaten (only) earth!
  • This mouth, indeed, has (always) been an eater of earth; but an earth that has been coloured. 4705
  • This roast-meat and this wine and this sugar are (merely) coloured and painted earth, O son.
  • When you have eaten or drunk (them) and they have become flesh and skin, He gives them the colour of flesh, but they are still the earth of (His) street.
  • ’Tis from a bit of earth that He stitches the (body of) clay, and then makes the whole (fabric) a bit of earth again.
  • Hindús and Qifcháq (Turks) and Greeks and Abyssinians— all have quite the same colour in the grave.
  • So you may know that all those colours and pictures are entirely a mask and deceit and borrowed (ephemeral). 4710
  • The only lasting colour is the dye of Allah: know that all the rest are tied (stuck) on (superficially) like a bell.
  • The colour of sincerity and the colour of piety and intuitive faith will endure in the (devout) worshippers for evermore;
  • And the colour of doubt and the colour of ingratitude and hypocrisy will endure in the undutiful soul for evermore;
  • Like wicked Pharaoh's blackness of face, the colour whereof is enduring, though his body passes away.
  • (And so with) the radiance and glory in the beauteous faces of the sincere (believers): their bodies pass away, but that remains till the Day of Judgement. 4715